- Can you make out what she is? Seems to be a dead man lashed with a mast, sir.
- We'll stop. He may only be wounded.

9 seconds sound clip from the The Snow Goose (1954) classic radio play.

You can hear this line at 00:23:05 in the radio play.

Quote context

[...]

- Blimy, look at that ruddy goose flying round and round.

- Told you it was a good omen. It's a blinking angel of mercy. That's what it is.

- When he had brought his boatload out to the Kentish Maid, Rhayader sailed back to the shore for seven more survivors, and all that day he sailed back and forth.

- A motorboat from the Thames Yacht Club had come to help in the job, and then a lifeboat from Poole, until the Kentish Maid had 700 souls aboard her.

- And when she sailed back to England, Rhayader waved from his little sailboat, and the snow goose flew circling overhead.

- It was four days later that a Limehouse tug was sailing back across the channel, towing four barges full of the last survivors from Dunkirk Beach.

- Can you make out what she is? Seems to be a dead man lashed with a mast, sir.

- We'll stop. He may only be wounded.

- What's that bird on a rail for heaven's sake?

- Looks like a goose.

- It is, sir.

- The goose has been flying over the beaches during all the evacuation. It becomes a sort of legend among the men. Some of those I brought back yesterday in the toilet had seen it.

- They said if you saw the flying wild goose you'd be saved. It's a sort of good luck omen.

- A wild goose? That one looks tame. Almost like a pet that he'd brought over with him.

[...]